“Let’s make it fruitful all over” Philippine Agriculture Dr. WILLIAM D. DAR President, InangLupa Movement
“Let’s make it fruitful all over” Philippine Agriculture
Dr. WILLIAM D. DAR President, InangLupa Movement
Major fruit species grown in the country
The Philippines has a rich diversity of tropical fruit wherein more than 20 different species are cultivated in the entire archipelago. Production system ranges from backyard to highly integrated operation catering to the export market. The farms are generally small in size (1-5 ha) with minimal care resulting to low yield.
banana pineapple mango papaya
calamansi durian jackfruit lanzones
Total production (MT) and area planted to
various fruit species in the Philippines
(BAS, 2014)
Average yield per hectare (MT) of various
fruit grown in the Philippines
(BAS, 2014)
Total volume of export (MT) of fresh fruit
from the Philippines
(BAS, 2014)
Total volume (MT) of export of fruit from
the Philippines, 2013 by commodity
(BAS, 2014)
Total volume (MT) of imports of fruit
by the Philippines
(BAS, 2014)
Total volume of imports of fruits by the
Philippines, 2013, by commodity
(BAS, 2014)
Total production (MT) and
area planted to banana,
pineapple, and mango
in the Philippines
Banana
Pineapple Mango
Top Philippine agricultural exports
Coconut (oil) – 26% Fresh banana – 8.7% Pineapple & products – 6.3%
Tuna – 5.8% Seaweeds & carrageenan – 3.9% Tobacco manufactured – 3.7%
Fertilizer manufactured – 3.3% Milk & cream products – 3.2% Fresh mango – 0.3%
Other Philippine agricultural commodities that can be developed for exports
Cacao Coffee Rubber
Palm oil Peanuts & mixed nuts Prawns
Papaya Healthy drinks Raw sugar
Prospect of Philippine Integration into AEC in 2015
presents both challenges and opportunities
Uncertain conditions brought by AEC that needs broad policy responses and strategies
- Regional free trade will not be uniform among countries
- Countries with most investment and modernized sectors will be more competitive
- Freest and most policy mechanism will gain the most
In its current state, is Philippine agriculture ready to maximize the
opportunities offered by these deepening trade and investments
within ASEAN?
• Link fruits especially those with export potentials to inclusive value chain framework
• Improve the volume and quality of fruits to ensure sustainability in the global market
• Integration of the production and marketing for each fruit species
• Increase productivity/areas of production in order to attain the economy of scale to expand/open new markets abroad
With the ASEAN Economic Community 2015, the
fruit industry faces a big challenge to provide a
safe product at competitive prices.
• Enhance the government extension services in order to efficiently transfer new technologies to growers to enhance their production and marketing efficiency
• Good Agricultural Practices (GAPs) should be strongly pursued by the growers as well as its subsequent product certification
• Government must strengthen R&D activities in fruit industry
The 4x4x4 framework for a
- Inclusive
- Science-based
- Resilient
- Market-oriented
- Food Sufficiency
- Economic Security
- Nutritional Sufficiency
- Environmental Security
- Productivity
- Profitability
- Competitiveness
- Sustainability
4 Pillars 4 Development Goals*
4 Objectives
Vision A Modern and Industrialized
Philippine Agriculture
Enabling Strategies
*Plans and Programs
Legislative Agenda
New Philippine Agriculture
Vision:
Pillars of a new Philippine Agriculture
1. Inclusive
• The social process of growth must include the poor farmers in defining problems and searching for solutions. No one can help the farmers except when they learn to help themselves.
Farmer Empowerment
1. Producer 2. Team player 3. Scientist/Technologist 4. Businessman/Entrepreneur 5. Environmentalist
5 qualities of a farmer
2. Science-based
• There is room for folk wisdom but even that must be tested true by science. Technologies and systems must be evolved and must prove their economies of small scale for the small.
Narrowing the yield gaps
•Current farmers’ yields are lower by 2 to 5 folds than the achievable yields
•Vast potential of rainfed agriculture needs to be harnessed
0
2
4
6
8
1976 1979 1982 1985 1988 1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 2006 2010
Year
Yie
ld (
t h
a-1)
BW1
BW4C
Rate of growth
71 kg ha-1
y-1
Rate of growth
20 kg ha-1
y-1
Carrying Capacity
27 persons ha-1
Carrying Capacity
4.8 persons ha-1
Observed potential yield
0
2
4
6
8
1976 1979 1982 1985 1988 1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 2006 2010
Year
Yie
ld (
t h
a-1)
BW1
BW4C
Rate of growth
71 kg ha-1
y-1
Rate of growth
20 kg ha-1
y-1
Carrying Capacity
27 persons ha-1
Carrying Capacity
4.8 persons ha-1
Observed potential yield
Rainfed agriculture: a large untapped potential
3. Resilient • This has something to do
with the advent of climate change – not to mention livestock, crops must be able to grow well and yield well despite either lack of rain or too much rain, either drought or flood, either higher or lower temperature in the surroundings.
2066% yield increase
5% rise in agriculture growth annually
$ 230 million in four years
$ 1 invested = $ 314 return
4.4 million farmer beneficiaries
Bhoochetana: A novel initiative
4. Market-oriented
• The aim must always be to make farming profitable to the farmers, young or old. That is to say, farming must be run as a business, not simply a hand-to-mouth existence.
Inclusive Market-Oriented Development
(IMOD)
- is a development pathway in which value-adding innovations (technical, policy, institutional and others) enable the poor to capture larger rewards from markets, while managing their risks. The larger rewards motivate the adoption and impact of these innovations
Agribusiness:
Transform & upgrade agriculture from traditional farming to a globally competitive agribusiness sector
• rubber, coconut, mangoes, coffee, cacao, banana, palm oil; other high value crops
• supply chain gaps
• strengthen agro-processing & its linkages to production ---R&D; strengthen supply chains, upgrade commodity clusters; access to technologies, finance; regulatory & certification system
• deepen participation in Global Value Chain (GVC)
• Philippines as agribusiness regional hub
catalyst to drive regional economic transformation
Phase I 2014-2017
Phase II 2018-2021
Phase III 2022-2025
(Source: RM Aldaba, DTI)
Development Goals for the Agriculture Sector
For the country to be sufficient in rice along with the diversification into high-value commodities.
For the farmers and fisher folk to consider agriculture as remunerative ventures thru enterprise development including value addition.
For the crops and other commodities to meet the nutritional demands of the people following the balanced diet framework.
For the conservation and sustainable management of natural resources including coping with climate change.
High profitability can be achieved by reducing losses in harvesting, processing, and transport; it is also achieved by obtaining higher prices for farm produce.
For our agricultural products including value-added products to be competitive in the global market, we must produce quality commodities that can meet and satisfy the international export standards.
Sustainability is the capability of a farm undertaking to produce continuing benefits with minimal long-term effect on environmental resources such as vegetation and water.
High productivity can be achieved by utilizing high yielding varieties, using innovative & efficient technologies for production, & employing effective ways of processing agricultural & fisheries outputs.
Major Objectives
Productive Profitable Competitive Sustainable
Thank you!
“Towards an inclusive, science-based, resilient and
market-oriented Philippine agriculture”
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